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HIMSS Interoperability Showcase

HIMSS Interoperability Showcase. Orlando, Florida | February 2008. The Panel’s Purpose. To harmonize and integrate diverse standards that will meet clinical and business needs for sharing information among organizations and systems.

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HIMSS Interoperability Showcase

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  1. HIMSS Interoperability Showcase Orlando, Florida | February 2008

  2. The Panel’s Purpose To harmonize and integrate diverse standards that will meet clinical and business needs for sharing information among organizations and systems. • Establish HITSP Interoperability Specifications and promote their acceptance; • Support the deployment and implementation of HITSP Interoperability Specifications across the health care enterprise; • Facilitate the efforts of standards developing organizations to maintain, revise or develop new standards as required to support the HITSP Interoperability Specifications. Harmonized standards promote interoperability, enhance healthcare quality and contain costs

  3. HIT Standardization HITSP members agreed that a standard is a well-defined approach that supports a business process and . . . • has been agreed upon by a group of experts; • has been publicly vetted; • provides rules, guidelines, or characteristics; • helps to ensure that materials, products, processes and services are fit for their intended purpose; • is available in an accessible format; • is subject to an ongoing review and revision process. Standards Harmonizationis required when a proliferation of standards prevents progress rather than enabling it.

  4. HITSP and Its Stakeholders - Harmonizing and Integrating Standards To Meet Clinical and Business Needs Specialists Payers Suppliers Hospitals Review Boards Practice Guidelines Residential Care Providers Outpatient Healthcare Providers Government Agencies Patients Consumers Employers General Practitioners HITSP - volunteer-driven, consensus-based organization funded by the Department of Health and Human Services.

  5. Panel Members – Board of Directors – Technical and Coordination Committees HITSP members are representatives of the broad Healthcare IT community

  6. Federal Register/Vol. 73, No. 15/Wednesday, January 23, 2008/Notices 3973 DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), DHHS Notice of Availability: Secretarial Recognition of Certain Healthcare Information Technology Standards Panel (HITSP) Interoperability Specifications as Interoperability Standards for Health Information Technology Federal Agencies must use the Recognized Interoperability Standards that have been harmonized by the Healthcare Information Technology Standards Panel HITSP is playing an integral role in the development of a Nationwide Healthcare Information Network (NHIN) for the United States

  7. For Immediate ReleaseOffice of the Press SecretaryAugust 22, 2006 Executive Order:Promote Quality and Efficient Health Care in Federal Government Administered or Sponsored Health Care Programs Sec. 3. Agencies shall perform the following functions: Health Information Technology - For Federal Agencies. As each agency implements, acquires, or upgrades health information technology systems used for the direct exchange of health information between agencies and with non-Federal entities, it shall utilize, where available, health information technology systems and products that meet recognized interoperability standards. HITSP-Harmonized standards promote interoperability, enhance healthcare quality and contain costs

  8. Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology (CCHIT) Healthcare Information Technology Standards Panel (HITSP) Health Information Security and Privacy Collaboration (HISPC) Nationwide Health Information Network Architecture Projects(NHIN) In 2005, HHS Secretary Michael Leavitt chartered a public-private “Community” to serve as the focal point for America’s health information concerns and drive opportunities for increasing interoperability American Health Information Community The Community provides input and recommendations to HHS on how to make health records digital and interoperable, and assure that the privacy and security of those records are protected, in a smooth, market- led way. Plans are now underway to transition the AHIC to a public-private partnership based in the private sector.

  9. Identify a pool of standards for a general breakthrough area Identify gaps and overlaps for specific context Make recommendations for resolution of gaps and overlaps Develop Interoperability Specifications for using the selected standard(s) for a specific context Test the instruction for using the standard www.hitsp.org HITSP Standards Harmonization Open Inclusive Collaborative Use Case Driven

  10. Building a Framework for HIT Solutions • Interoperability Specifications are intended to be used by architects and system designers as a way to guide future implementation efforts based on health IT • These specifications represent an ongoing effort to create a framework/template that represents a solution set for solving the known problems related to an AHIC-defined Use Case

  11. Three Technical Committees were formed to focus on the initial set of AHIC breakthrough areas Care Delivery Technical Committees Consumer Empowerment Population Health • EHR – Lab Reporting • Emergency Responder– EHR • Medication Management • Consumer Empowerment • Consumer Access to Clinical Information • Biosurveillance • Quality

  12. Care Delivery Technical Committee • EHR – Lab ReportingDeploy standardized, widely available, secure solutions for accessing laboratory results and interpretations in a patient-centric manner for clinical care by authorized parties. • Emergency Responder – EHRCovers the use of the ER-EHR from the perspective of on-site care providers and emergency care clinicians. Definitive care clinicians involved in the care and treatment of emergency incident victims, medical examiner/fatality managers investigating cause of death, and public health practitioners using information contained in the ER-EHR, are included because of their interactions with the other portions of this use case. • Medication ManagementFocuses on patient medication information exchange, and the sharing of that information between consumers, clinicians (in multiple sites and settings of care), pharmacists, and organizations that provide health insurance and pharmacy benefits.

  13. Consumer Empowerment Technical Committee • Consumer EmpowermentDeploy to targeted populations a pre-populated, consumer-directed and secure electronic registration summary. Deploy a widely available pre-populated medication history linked to the registration summary. • Consumer Access to Clinical InformationIncludes three scenarios which describe highlights of the processes, roles and information exchanges which could enable a consumer’s access to clinical information via a personal health record (PHR). The three scenarios are: Consumers receive and access clinical information; Consumers create provider lists and establish provider access permissions; and Consumers transfer PHR information.

  14. Population Health Technical Committee • BiosurveillanceTransmit essential ambulatory care and emergency department visit, utilization, and lab result data from electronically enabled health care delivery and public health systems in standardized and anonymized format to authorized public health agencies with less than one day lag time. • QualityThis use case depicts two scenarios related to quality measurement, feedback and reporting with respect to a patient’s encounter with the healthcare delivery system: quality measurement of hospital-based care and of care provided by clinicians.

  15. I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX Receive Request to Harmonize Identify Candidate Standards Begin Inspection Testing Select Standards Begin Support Identify and Resolve Gaps, Duplications and Overlap Release and Disseminate Interoperability Specification Conduct Requirements Analysis Develop Interoperability Specification Steps in the HITSP Harmonization Process HITSP Program Management

  16. Technical Notes Transaction Package Transaction Component Available for Internal reuse or repurposing Harmonization Framework Use Case Identifies interoperability business needs • Interoperability Specification • Identifies what HITSP lower-level constructs are used to meet business needs • Defines Requirements, Context and Constraints for those constructs • Addresses multi-year roadmap as needed SDO Composite Standard #1 Base Standard #2 Base Standard #3 Composite Standard #4 Base Standard #5 Base Standard #n Base Standard #n

  17. Standards Readiness CriteriaTier I • The standards required to support each major Use Case event were organized within an agreed upon standards taxonomy • The standards selected for inclusion in the pool were examined using ‘HITSP approved’ Harmonization Readiness Criteria

  18. SuitabilityThe standard is named at a proper level of specificity and meets technical and business criteria of use case CompatibilityThe standard shares common context, information exchange structures, content or data elements, security and processes with other HITSP harmonized standards or adopted frameworks as appropriate Preferred Standards CharacteristicApproved standards, widely used, readily available, technology neutral, supporting uniformity, demonstrating flexibility and international usage are preferred Standards Development Organization and ProcessMeet selected criteria including balance, transparency, developer due process, stewardship and others Total Costs and Ease of ImplementationDeferred to future work Standards Readiness CriteriaTier II

  19. New AHIC Use Cases (2008) * formally called“Remote Consultations” Consultations and Transfers of Care PersonalizedHealthcare Immunizations and Response Management Public Health Case Reporting RemoteMonitoring Patient – Provider Secure Messaging*

  20. HITSP 2008 Work Plan – IS Development 2/11/08 HITSP Board WE ARE HERE 6/16/08 HITSP Board 9/29/08 HITSP Board 12/2/08 HITSP Board 12/13/07 HITSP Panel 2/20/08 HITSP Panel 3/27/08 HITSP Panel 6/23/08 HITSP Panel 10/6/08 HITSP Panel 12/8/08 HITSP Panel APR FEB NOV DEC JAN MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC 1/23 – 1/25 TC F2F Chicago 3/24 – 3/26 TC F2F DC Area 5/12 – 5/14 TC F2F TBD 6/11 – 6/13 TC F2F DC Area 9/8 – 9/10 TC F2F TBD 10/28 – 10/30 TC F2F Chicago Phase I Use Cases EHR and BIO v 3.0 S&P v 1.0 Update constructs with S&P Phase 2 Use Cases ER-EHR v 1.1, CA Media and Quality v 1.0 and CA Network v 3.0 Potential Phase 3 timeline based on receipt of final use cases in mid-March 2008 and based on “standard” 9 to 10 month delivery cycle. Subject to change based on TC analysis of use cases Medications Management v 1.0 Comment Construct Dev Comment Resolution 2008 Use Cases v 1.0 Phase 3 Use Cases Plan Comment Comment RDSS IS Development Comment Res

  21. In order to better conduct its new work, HITSP is implementing a new Technical Committee structure • Three (3) Perspective Committees aligned with AHIC perspectives • Provider • Population • Consumer • Three (3) Domain Committees focused on healthcare domains • Care Management and Health Records • Security, Privacy and Infrastructure • Administrative and Financial

  22. Provider Perspective Care Management and Health Records Domain Committee NEW . . . . HITSP TC Matrix Organization Population Perspective Consumer Perspective Security, Privacy and Infrastructure Domain Committee Administrative and Financial Domain Committee

  23. Perspective Technical CommitteesTerms of Reference • Review each new Use Case or Interoperability Request, provide feedback to requestor, evaluate scope of effort and develop statements of work for completion • Perform high level design of Interoperability Specifications and lower level constructs including requirements analysis, standards selection and minimum data set identification • Submit recommendations to Panel for review, approval and resolution • Identify Domain Committee(s) and provide high level design and statements of work to guide construct development • Develop, review and evaluate Interoperability Specifications for the selected standards, integrating relevant constructs • Manage overall execution plan/schedule in collaboration with Domain Committees • Ensure timely response and disposition of public comments • Ensure on-going process for addressing corrections/change requests and resolutions

  24. Domain Technical CommitteesTerms of Reference • Identify and analyze gaps and duplications within the standards industry as they relate to domain constructs • Describe gaps, including missing or incomplete standards • Describe duplications, overlaps, or competition among standards • List all standards that satisfy requirements imposed by the relevant Use Case or Interoperability Request and apply readiness criteria • Interact with Standards Organizations to coordinate communication regarding standards gaps, overlaps, and identification of standards • Evaluate, select and constrain recommended standards • Receive and prioritize statements of work and collaborate with Perspective Committees to refine scope and develop work plan • Develop and/or revise domain constructs to meet requirements, high level design and statements of work • Maximize reuse with consideration for backwards compatibility • Ensure domain constructs adequately support all Interoperability Specifications referencing those constructs • Work in collaboration with Perspective Committees to meet project schedule and timelines

  25. HITSP Panel Board of Directors HITSP Panel Board of Directors Technical Committee Technical Committee Care Delivery Provider Perspective Committees Population Population Health Consumer Security, Privacy and Infrastructure Consumer Empowerment Domain Committees Care Management and Health Records Security and Privacy Administrative and Financial Foundations Committee Foundations Committee The Transition Plan PLANNED TC STRUCTURE CURRENT TC STRUCTURE New New

  26. Joint Working Group Healthcare Information Technology Standards Panel (HITSP) and the Certification Commission on Healthcare Information Technology (CCHIT) Between the federal implications and the certification efforts of CCHIT, stakeholders will be motivated to adopt a standard way of sharing data throughout the Nationwide HealthInformation Network, leading to better healthcare for us all.

  27. HHS has awarded $22.5 million in contracts to nine HIEs to begin trial implementations of the NHIN Trial Implementations • CareSparkTri-Cities region of Eastern Tennessee and Southwestern Virginia • Delaware Health Information NetworkDelaware • Indiana UniversityIndianapolis Metroplex • Long Beach Network for HealthLong Beach and Los Angeles, California • Lovelace Clinic FoundationNew Mexico • MedVirginiaCentral Virginia • New York eHealth CollaborativeNew York • North Carolina Healthcare Information and Communications Alliance, Inc.North Carolina • West Virginia Health Information NetworkWest Virginia HITSP will work closely with these contractors during implementation.

  28. Also available on www.hitsp.org News, organizational details and information on upcoming meetings HITSP Public Document Library Interoperability Specifications (ISs) and Executive Summaries Use Cases HITSP Information Resources

  29. Join HITSP in developing a safe and secure health information network for the United States. Learn more at www.hitsp.orgor contact . . . Michelle Deane, ANSI mmaasdeane@ansi.org Re: HITSP, its Board and Coordinating Committees Jessica Kant, HIMSS Theresa Wisdom, HIMSS jkant@himss.orgtwisdom@himss.org Re: HITSP Technical Committees

  30. Sponsor Strategic Partners

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